A particularly angry Martin Victor of Temecula walked up to the
podium, ripped the preliminary document in half and tossed it to
the floor in front of the dais.

"This is to your ordinance," Victor said.

Sam Anderson of Indian Wells termed the possible restrictions
"unbelievable."

Anderson said he suffers from epilepsy and discovered a way to
control seizures through marijuana-laced ice cream. And he said he
has developed marijuana ice cream, cup cakes and pizza products
that he sells to collectives.

Brent Buhrman, who operates a storefront dispensary in the Mira
Loma community west of Riverside, was less combative.

"I understand that this is merely a rough draft," Buhrman said.
"Thank you for making a move in the right direction for our
community."

Stone, a supervisor from Temecula, said the potential provisions
were merely concepts ---- things that may or may not be included in
an ordinance.

And supervisors said they would wait to adopt an ordinance until
after Nov. 2, when California voters will decide whether to
legalize marijuana through Proposition 19.